Image representing a season of rest, healing, and learning to receive God's invitation to simply be
Healing

A Season of Rest

Rest, as it turns out, is really, really productive. Working and living from a place of rest doesn't just sustain us—it creates sustainability, emotional health, and the strength to live fully alive.

By · · 5 min read

Rest, as it turns out, is really, really productive.

Working and living from a place of rest is not only sustainable, but it also actually creates sustainability. It also creates emotional, spiritual and physical health.

For the past few years I’ve been in a season of rest and healing. Learning the art of resting was incredibly uncomfortable for me at first, and if I’m honest, I used to think rest was the equivalent of a lazy, unmotivated, and unfulfilling waste of time. Resting equaled feeling guilty because there was too much achieving, performing, and surviving to do.

I experienced the Lord clearly impressing upon me to rest after a very devastating and severely draining period in my life. In search of direction I asked, “Lord, what do you want me to do now, what is next?”

He simply pressed on my heart, “Rest.”

I laughed and laughed.

Surely that wasn’t from Father.

When it dawned on me that ‘rest’ would never, ever have come from my Martha mind, I asked again and sensed yet again…

“Rest.”

I knew in my knower what I had sensed, and I knew He had purpose and reason behind this rest thing. So, I gave myself permission to rest and embarked on learning what in the world that looked like walked out.

I wasn’t good at it at first because it felt awkward, uncomfortable, foreign, unproductive, and silly. It was new to me. But I knew how insistent Father had been.

I pressed in.

Here’s what I ended up learning. Resting isn’t really all about naps, reading a good book, baking bread, lighting candles, taking baths and home spa treatments. It’s all that and much, much more.

I learned about quieting. Quieting my mind, my thoughts. I was in my head way too much about too much for far too long.

I’ve learned that resting is saying no more than I say yes. And not feeling bad about it.

Resting is also being selective about how I spend my time and purposeful in the activities I choose to do and not do. Resting is letting my yes’s be yes, and my no’s be no. It’s also being selective about the people I spend time with in my inner life. It’s about not controlling or fixing, or worrying or replaying all the things in my mind.

I’ve learned that rest, or the now popular term ‘self care,’ is really anything that makes me feel more like myself. It’s about feeling centered in my head, in the space I’m in, and the people I’m with. Getting comfortable in my skin, in my body and reveling in being me.

Self-care looks like validating my own feelings and giving my feelings a place to take up space in myself and in my world and letting them land so I can feel them, process them, and know what I’m about. Self-care is learning to trust myself. Self-care is loving myself instead of putting myself down or judging myself, and talking to myself gently, kindly, and lovingly in my thought life.

Anything that brings me life, joy, peace and makes me smile is welcome. It’s gentle, it’s slow and it literally feels physically peaceful.

I’m now truly protective of my peace.

In my rest journey, I have discovered so many delights that, as it turns out, have been there all along but buried under a task-oriented, achieving, survival-mode life. I’ve learned about some things that bring me joy, and light me up. I’ve learned about some things that motivate me, and I can identify what drains me.

It feels restful to water and pamper my garden and my houseplants. It feels delightful to create beauty and efficiency in my home. It feels gentle to learn a new crochet stitch and take refreshing walks with our adorable pug, Molly Kate Joy.

It feels joyful to spend time with dear friends who delight in my joys, point me to the Lord, and invest in and support my journey—people I can be myself with. It feels like a natural high to be in my kitchen creating meals that taste like comfort food but are healthy and feed the body and starve disease.

It’s a priority now to frequent farmer’s markets, gardening stores, my favorite tea and spice stores, peruse my seed catalogs, and read great historical fictions. I also plan to learn about beekeeping soon.

Because, why not?! Whether or not I’ll actually be a beekeeper, who’s to know, but I want to take the class!

It feels life-giving to spend time with my husband, my bestest friend in the whole wide world. A man who has supported and invested in my rest journey in every. single. way. for years now.

In learning how to rest I focused on gleaning knowledge that pertained to my healing path and turns out, it has been a lot about self-discovery and self-investment. I had some work to do in areas of my emotional maturity and healing, and that work didn’t include striving to be or behavior modification. I’ve been going for inner transformation.

I want what pours out of me to come from a place of grace and health.

Rest, as it turns out, provides strength for everything. Working and living from a place of rest is not only sustainable, but it also actually creates sustainability. It also creates emotional, spiritual and physical health.

I’m thankful for this season of rest, because I’m strong in ways I never have been and have clarity I’ve not had before. I know myself more than ever and I’m motivated by peace and by love.

I won’t be without rest again. It is a priority and a part of the new threads going into the mosaic fabric of my life.

This season has been perhaps the most important, most sacred and holy season of my life thus far.

Father knew just what I needed.

Rest.

Frequently Asked Questions

How did Rebecca know God was calling her to a season of rest?

After a devastating and draining period in her life, Rebecca asked God what was next. The impression she received, clearly and persistently, was simply: "Rest." She initially laughed it off — rest would never have come from her own striving "Martha" mind. But the repeated sense of that word, combined with knowing it didn't originate in her own nature, convinced her it was genuinely from the Father. She gave herself permission to begin.

What did rest actually look like in practice?

Rest, Rebecca discovered, wasn't primarily about naps or spa treatments — though it included those. It meant quieting her mind, saying no more than yes, being selective about how she spent her time and who she spent it with. It looked like validating her own feelings, trusting herself, speaking kindly to herself in her thought life, and choosing activities that brought genuine joy — gardening, cooking, walking with her pug, reading, and time with life-giving friends.

Is rest actually productive?

Yes — deeply so. Working and living from a place of rest creates sustainability, emotional health, spiritual health, and physical health. Rebecca found that through rest, she developed strength she'd never had before, clarity she hadn't experienced, and a deeper knowledge of herself. She became motivated by peace and love rather than striving, and what emerged from her life was authentic and life-giving rather than manufactured and depleted.

What is self-care in a spiritual context?

True self-care is anything that makes you feel more like yourself — centered, peaceful, and at home in your own skin. It means validating your own feelings, giving your emotions space to land and be processed, learning to trust yourself, and talking to yourself with the kindness and gentleness you would extend to a dear friend. It is not selfish — it is a form of stewardship of the life God gave you.

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